{1} This appeal involves the loss-of-eonsortium claim brought by Bill Wachocki (Bill), the adult brother of Jason Wachocki (Jason). Twenty-two-year-old Jason was killed when his vehicle was struck by a speeding van driven by Willie Hiley (Willie), a corrections officer at the Metropolitan Detention Center (jail). Bill argues his loss-of-consortium claim was improperly foreclosed by the application of the “mutual dependence” standard which was developed for spousal-type relationships. Lozoya v. Sanchez,
I.BACKGROUND
{2} Jason was 15 months older than Bill and as children they had shared a bedroom together. At the time of Jason’s death, they had been sharing an apartment for approximately eight months. Jason and Bill split the rent, utilities, and grocery bills and shared household chores and cooking. The brothers enjoyed a close relationship. They spent their free time together, socializing, playing basketball, and going to the movies and the racetrack. Bill considered his older brother his role model and best friend, and he relied on Jason for advice and emotional support.
{3} While upholding a wrongful death claim against the Bernalillo County Sheriffs Department (BCSD), the courts below denied the loss-of-consortium claim brought by Jason’s brother, Bill. Wachocki v. Bernalillo Cnty. Sheriffs Dep’t,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
{4} We address whether the courts below improperly foreclosed Bill’s recovery for loss of consortium by applying the Lozoya mutual dependence factors. The Lozoya factors assess whether the claimant and the injured party shared a sufficiently close relationship, proof of which is necessary to recover under a consortium theory. See Fitzjerrell v. City of Gallup ex rel. Gallup Police Dep’t,
III. AVAILABILITY OF RECOVERY FOR SIBLING’S LOSS-OF-CONSORTIUM CLAIM
{5} A loss-of-consortium claimant must demonstrate two elements in order to recover damages. See Fitzjerrell,
“the duration of the relationship, the degree of mutual dependence, the extent of common contributions to a life together, the extent and quality of shared experience, and ... whether the plaintiff and the injured person were members of the same household, their emotional reliance on each other, the particulars of their day to day relationship, and the manner in which they related to each other in attending to life’s mundane requirements.”
{6} The Court of Appeals concluded that the siblings did not share a sufficiently close relationship under the Lozoya test. See Wachocki,
{7} BCSD responds that adopting Bill’s proposed test would exalt the legal status of siblings over the fact-specific inquiry into mutual dependence, and therefore is inconsistent with our analysis in Lozoya. In Lozoya, we considered “whether unmarried cohabitants may recover against negligent actors for loss of consortium.”
{8} We decline to inject factors specific to the sibling relationship into our loss of consortium analysis. A relationship-specific test is not in accord with Lozoya, which clarified that legal status is not a “dispositive factor in determining whether loss of consortium benefits should be extended.”
{9} Though we decline to inject sibling-specific factors into the analysis of whether the claimant and injured parties shared a sufficiently close relationship, we hold that the analysis should be streamlined to accommodate
{10} With that goal in mind, we conclude that mutual dependence is the key element. The unmarried cohabitants in Lozoya were certainly mutually dependent— they jointly ran a household, made life decisions together and had made a long-term commitment to one another. See id. ¶¶ 9-10, 29. Similarly, in Fernandez v. Walgreen Hastings Co., a grandparent claiming loss of consortium shared a household with the granddaughter she lost and acted as the child’s caretaker.
{11} Having concluded that mutual dependence is the key factor in determining whether the claimant shared a sufficiently close relationship with the injured party, we proceed to apply this analysis, looking to the factual findings made by the district court. See Fitzjerrell,
{12} We are mindful of the limited nature of loss-of-consortium claims in other jurisdictions. Many jurisdictions have expressly rejected sibling loss-of-consortium claims. See Bobick v. U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
{13} We conclude that the factual findings made by the district court do not demonstrate a sufficiently close relationship, and therefore recovery for loss of consortium is not available to Bill. We need not address the remaining element of loss of consortium, a duty of care. See Lozoya,
IV. CONCLUSION
{14} The findings presented here do not establish Bill Waehocki’s right to recover damages for loss of consortium.
{15} IT IS SO ORDERED.
